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#51
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~^ beancounter ~^ wrote:
Clintion policies led Bush into the 9/11 mess.... If you say so. John Mullen |
#53
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#54
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![]() Johnny Bravo wrote: On 23 Jun 2006 11:16:02 -0700, wrote: Johnny Bravo wrote: On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 18:16:38 GMT, Ricardo wrote: The Iraqis ARE standing up and fighting for themselves but the trouble is, like when the Germans invaded France in WW2 (although at least the French had declared war on Germany), the occupying power with its indiscriminate killing of civilians then brands anyone who reacts to this as a 'terrorist'. So how many civilians have we rounded up according to policy and shot in reprisal? If you answered none, you'd be correct. That has yet to be determined. "According to policy" Care to cite the official policy of the US military to round up civilians and have them executed in reprisals for attacks on US troops? You are correct, there is, as of yet, no evidence that the shootings in Ieraq were according to policy. Nor do I expect any to be forthcoming. I do believe that the murders of Dilawar and Habibulah in Bagram prison were according to the policy of, or at best a consequence of the willfull ignorance of the base commander. the light sentences for those convicted are telling. LIght sentences for persons convicted of beating chained prisoners to death is not a good policy. Take all the screens you need, I'll wait. In October 2004 the best scientific data in the world on civilian casualties in Iraq was analysed and they came up with a guess; they were 95% sure it was somewhere between 6,000 and 194,000 and they didn't, or couldn't, even try to narrow it down further. Since you are not familiar with statistics, That's an unwarranted assumption on your part. I was giving you the benefit of doubt. Someone who is familiar with statistics, who makes a statement such as yours above, would not be writing honestly. OTOH, it was considered to be too dangerous to conduct interviews in some areas, those were assumed to have the same mortality rates and the safer surrounding areas. That tends to underestimate mortality. That's another unwarranted assumption on your part, just because it might have been dangerous for interviewers doesn't mean that more people died there. I agree that it is an assumption. I disagree that it is unwarranted. The numbers 6,000 to 194,000 were not estimated total deaths. They were an estimate of deaths in excess of the number of deaths in a similar period before the invasion. I'm well aware of that and so is everyone else, thanks though. Regardless, a number of OTHER persons make the false claim that the study shows that the US has killed 100,000 civilians in Iraq. I do not remember the median value exactly, it was around 100,000. That implies a 50% confidence that the excess deaths were less than 100,000 and simultaneously 50% confidence that they were greater. 100,000 plus or minus 94,000, they have a guess with such a large margin that it is all but meaningless. Again, a person who understands statistics knows that 'guessing' is not involved. Whether you are being honest or not is left as an exercise for the reader. If a doctor tells you that you have between 12 and 18 months to live you can do something useful with that information. If the doctor tells you that you have between 6 months and 22 years to live; that's all but useless information to you. I disagree. I presume that you have no disagreement with the other meaningful comments you edited out. I also note that you did not insert any indicator of where and how you edited my remarks before replying... -- FF |
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In message , Alan Lothian
writes In article , Paul J. Adam wrote: In semi-modern parlance, US domestic opinion was a centre of gravity, and keeping public opinion on-side was a key enabling factor that North Vietnam successfully attacked. Well, yes. It's that "attention deficit" again. Something that US allies have learned to worry about. For a distressingly long time. (Sorry for the delayed response, Alan, been having fun up in the Minches) To give them credit, when you convince the US public, they can get very determined, but when El Presidente makes a decision without getting his country behind him... it goes about as badly as when we try it. Or, flipping it around, if the "fight" crowd in the US had made a better case for "why we fight" then things might have been very different. Hmmm. Yes, but. I never said "better" - one risk is a little too much MacArthuresque "never fear, Mr President, those cowardly commies will _never_ dare to... well, who'd'a'thunk it?" - but most certainly different. Once a _Dolchstoss_ myth takes hold it's remarkably powerful, and a US without that is a big change. (Probably more appropriate to s.h.w-i, though) At the risk of pushing this more-than-somewhat OT topic into an arid wilderness, we are faced with the fait accompli of the destruction of the liberal arts education in the US and much of the anglosphere in favour of some kind of bizarre, historically-ignorant, posturing self-loathing that passes for "the Left". Which has gained itself a stranglehold, a bit like Russian ivy, all over the bloody place, especially the meeja. You hardly need it, Alan, but Frances Wheen's "How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered The World" is a good read on these matters - I especially enjoyed the description of l'affaire Sokal, which I had not previously heard of, but which conformed with horrible precision my preconceptions of how such a prank might go. Me, when I need leftwing guidance, I ask myself what Lenin would have done. The answer rarely involves gender politics or queer studies, but tends towards, shall we say, more robust solutions. When in doubt, shoot some more intellectuals, revisionists, hooligans and saboteurs... and if they run short, shoot anyone inconvenient and _then_ denounce them as revisionists, intellectuals, saboteurs and hooligans. (Today's soggy-Left should thank their lucky stars Lenin and Stalin are no more, it always seemed to be easier to kill toadies than real opponents. Trotsky took a lot of hunting and killing, while Stalin executed most of his 'inner circle' with little apparent effort) From which, as the most liberal and tolerant of men, I am usually obliged to distance myself. Still, it's always there as a thought. I'd consider myself fairly liberal, in the classical sense at least (even got a degree from UCL) though I grow less tolerant with age. Perhaps Lenin was too soft in limiting himself to small-arms. This is one reason I get very, very angry with anyone who dismisses "the media". They may be ill-informed (and many are), they may be downright hostile (and many are), but they have to be worked with and dealt with. Ignore them or annoy them and they will hurt you badly. Another "yes, but." The thing I can't forgive the meeja (by which I mean overwhelmingly tv) is their utter incapacity to avoid telling lies. Indeed, their complete epistemological inability to tell one from the other: only what makes "good" tv and what does not. They're quite smart at that. From a military point of view, that's like complaining about geography: why do the enemy never let you assault them downhill, over dry ground with good going yet plenty of nice concealing folds and tussocks, on a day not so hot you sweat to death during the assault nor so cold that certain important bits froze off waiting for H-Hour? "The meeja" exist as they are, just as the weather and the ground and the enemy do. Good commanders do what they can to gain benefit from them (like, making sure 'Our Story' is better TV than 'Their Story') while limiting the damage they can do. Not easy, but that's why good commanders are to be cherished. Hence, the hard work required of a J3 Media Ops staffer. Thankless in success, worse in failure. Sadly, far from alone in the military pantheon. Even I, having a layer of political insulation and friendly distance from the _direct_ consequences of any failure, will likely only come to notice if things go badly pear-shaped. -- Paul J. Adam |
#56
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![]() Johnny Bravo wrote: On 23 Jun 2006 10:05:57 -0700, wrote: Johnny Bravo wrote: On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 13:40:29 GMT, Ricardo wrote: ... We're nearly two years on now. Try this: http://www.informationclearinghouse....ticle11674.htm I know you're stupid but it appears that you can at least read. Should you have actually read the cite you posted you would be aware that the article in question references the Lancet article. You know, the one where they are 95% sure the number is between 6,000 and 194,000 but are either unwilling or unable to narrow it down with any real confidence. Unwilling to commit fraud because there is no statistically valid way to 'narrow' down the results. Untrue. It could have been accomplished with a larger sample size. No, that would not narrow down the results. It would produce a new, larger dataset with new results. The conclusion was that the mortality rate was determined, at a confidence level of 95%, to be higher post-invasion than pre-invasion. That wasn't the conclusion at all. Between diverting food and medicine funds to build more palaces, starting wars with his neighbors and using chemical weapons on his own people; Saddam was easily killing 50,000 or more of his own people every single year in addition to all other causes Just where in the study published in Lancet did you find that conclusion? -- FF |
#57
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
:On Thu, 22 Jun 2006 16:35:38 -0700, "Robert" wrote: : :"Vince" wrote in message m... : Fred J. McCall wrote: : : Along about 1964 we should have sunk everything in Haiphong Harbor, : leveled Hanoi and put a million men in the country marching north. : : Except that the Russians quite clearly let us know that we risked nuclear : war if we did that. Not to mention That we didn't have the million men in : 1964 to spare from confronting the Warsaw Pact. : :You REALLY need to view Vietnam in context, not in hind sight. : :View it as the war after Korea. :Where when the west was in danger of 'wining' militarily the ChiComs sent in :large numbers of troops instead of just supplies. And kicked butt. : :That was why all the 'pussy footing' around happened. Fear of getting into :an actual shooting war with China, again. : :Then, review Korea. The Korean war was a UN action. The Security :Council voted to deploy UN forces (not USA) and that was to maintain :the integrity of the south from a manifest invasion. Fixed, :conventional military forces, not revolutionaries. You are correct :that the Chinese intervened when it was apparent that their proxies :could not get the job done. : :Note that the intervention was NOT nuclear. Note that the Soviets were :NOT involved either. Also note that there was bombing just pretty close to Chinese territory (if not actually in it) which may have had a bit to do with their decision to send troops. :Now, review the relationship between Vietnam and China. Vietnam was :and is NOT a friend of China. There was NOT an invasion (until well :into 1968) and the war was not a conventional fixed piece, traditional :front sort of conflict. The US forces did not move N. of the 17th ![]() :were a supporter of NVN. : :Much different situation than Korea. And, as I said, if we'd just said we'd stop well short of the Chinese border there probably wouldn't have been a Chinese reaction at all. -- "We come into the world and take our chances. Fate is just the weight of circumstances. That's the way that Lady Luck dances. Roll the bones...." -- "Roll The Bones", Rush |
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#59
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#60
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